ἀνέῳγεν

anoígō

To open (literally), such as to unclose a door, gate, or any physical object; in extended or figurative senses, to make accessible or reveal, including opening something to understanding, disclosing information, or enabling an event or opportunity. Its primary sense is physical opening, but it is commonly used in a wide range of figurative contexts in Hellenistic Greek literature and biblical texts, including the opening of eyes (awakening perception), mouth (to speak), heart (to understand or feel), heavens (to reveal divine action), or a scroll/book (to grant access to contents).

G455

2 Corinthians 6:11 · Word #4

Lexicon G455

Lemmaἀνοίγω
Transliterationanoígō
Strong'sG455
DefinitionTo open (literally), such as to unclose a door, gate, or any physical object; in extended or figurative senses, to make accessible or reveal, including opening something to understanding, disclosing information, or enabling an event or opportunity. Its primary sense is physical opening, but it is commonly used in a wide range of figurative contexts in Hellenistic Greek literature and biblical texts, including the opening of eyes (awakening perception), mouth (to speak), heart (to understand or feel), heavens (to reveal divine action), or a scroll/book (to grant access to contents).

Morphology V PRF ACT IND 3P SG All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state of being
Tense PRF — Perfect — Completed action with ongoing results
Voice ACT — Active — The subject performs the action
Mood IND — Indicative — States a fact or reality
Person 3P — 3rd person — The one spoken about ("he/she/it/they")
Number SG — Singular — One

Lexical Info

Lemmaἀνεώγω
Strong'sG455

SIBI-P1 Translation G455-04

has opened up

Morphological NotesVerb; perfect tense (completed action with present result), active voice, indicative mood, 3rd person singular.
Rendering RationaleThe perfect active indicative third singular expresses a completed act with continuing result—"has opened up," implying it now stands open or accessible. "Opened up" preserves the compound force of ἀνά + οἴγω and its core sense of causing something to be opened.

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